America barron
English 2
Period-7
2 March 2023
Antigone Rhetorical Analysis
It is so easy to get manipulated and taken advantage of.This is shown in the play,by sophocles,creon uses logical manipulation to appeal to antigone in order to get her to understand she was in the wrong for not following his directions.On the other hand,antigone uses emotional manipulation to appeal to creon in order to show him that she doesn't care if she dies but she will bury her brother to show him respect and let him rest in peace. In the play Creon uses logical manipulation to appeal to antigone in order to get her to understand that she was in the wrong for not following his commands and breaking the rules and how she should listen to what he says.This is shown when creon says¨a enemy is a enemy even dead¨(sophocles pg17).This proves and shows us how creon is telling antigone that he won't bury her brother because he is a enemy and he does not deserve that kind of respect. Creon is using logical manipulation against antigone by telling her that he died as a
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This is explaining how she does not care if she dies she will die with her brother and by his side. She will die with pride and she will feel at peace knowing her brother's soul was set free and he is resting in peace.This is shown when antigone said ¨ Creon is not enough to stand in my way¨(sophocles pg3). Antigone is using emotional manipulation to get in creon's head by saying he is nothing saying he won't stop her from burning her brother because she wants him to die in peace and to be buried with respect.This gets to creon because he sees that nothing he says to antigone will stop her not even
Meaning that she will die because that is the “right” thing to do. Even though Antigone is marrying Creon’s son she has broken the law and has to be put to death because of her actions. Creon doesn’t want to come off too the public as soft or not a good leader.
"There is nothing shameful in burying my brother (Plato,72). Antigone's morals are still unable to see her tragic flaw. With Antigone’s death it is viewed by her insolence toward Creon, but by her failure to reason with her emotional values. Antigone impels Creon by defying his order which causes the fate of her life. Instead of obeying to Creon’s verdict this overcomes her
He says in the story that he will not allow Antigone to change his mind and defy his judgment. Creon has too much pride and probably takes Antigone questioning his judgment as an insult to his authority being the king of Thebes. He doesn't want to make changes to his rule of letting Polyneices’ body rot and anyone who tries to bury him be stoned and look weak. Creon is foolish in his action and by choosing to not
Antigone Revised Essay As one of Sophocles’s most well known works, Antigone shows the complicated dynamics that correspond to the deaths of two brothers and enemies. Creon, the uncle of the two, faces great internal struggle when dealing with the results of their deaths and burials. In this play, Creon’s mind is conflicted in his struggle with the forces of pride and humility, based on the decisions of being right and doing the right thing when faced with the conflicting roles of power. Creon’s most noticeable character flaw is his pride, as his stubborn nature insists on his ruling being the strict law of the land.
Whenever people are willing to sacrifice themselves for their beliefs and actions, there are always others who view them with honor, respect, and admiration. Thus, Antigone already had a couple strong elements to her argument, but she presents even stronger ideas in her argument with Creon over her attempted burial of her brother. During this argument, Creon constantly points out how Antigone is breaking the law and burying a traitor (Polyneices) who slayed her honorable brother (Eteocles). Antigone refutes his points through a strong assessment that stresses important ideas that many could understand as being reasonable. For example, Antigone refuted Creon's statement about her insulting her brother Eteocles by refuting, "The dead man would not say that I insult it.
Later in the play, Antigone does pay respects to her brother and gets caught. She is taken to the palace for persecution; the verdict of the trial led by Creon (the ruler of the city state) is death. Antigone is proud of what she has done, and is determined to now follow through with her punishment. She is sent to a cave to pay her respects to the gods, and after
Creon puts many people down or scares people into doing everything he says, and by proving it. He threw Antigone into a cave and blocked the entry. He does this to scare the people so they will listen to him and not turn their back. So when Creon’s son came to see Antigone and saw that she hanged herself instead of dying slowly. When Creon heard about this he got to the cave as soon as he could.
“…even if she were closer than my sister’s child, closer than any who shares my family’s chapel, she and her sister will not escape the worst fate” by saying that, he believes she will stop with the arguments and simply follow his laws however, it’s quite the opposite what happens next. She mocks him even more by questioning, “Do you want something more than killing me?” Later on into the scene, they start discussing the death of Polynices and Eteocles, while Creon believes that Polynices shouldn’t deserve to be buried and that the gods wouldn’t like him because he is bad person. “The good don’t want to share honors with the bad” However, in the other hand Antigone replies by saying that both of them should be buried, this causes Creon to enrage and exclaim “No woman will rule
Another way this quote can relate to the book is Antigone goes through great sacrifice in order to bury her brother. For instance, if she gets caught Creon will punish he for the crime. During a conversation with her sister Ismene, Antigone says “I never did a nobler thing than bury my brother Polyneices”(Sophocles 32). This quote means that despite the fact that she can be punished, Antigone is still proud of what she did. Creon had threatened to bury Antigone to death but she did not let that stop her
Antigone is a play written by Sophocles that focuses on the consequences of Antigone's decision to defy her uncle the king and bury her brother Polyneices. The play presents Antigone as a brave and noble character who is willing to sacrifice her life to bury her brother, which is a death sentence. Although her uncle, King Creon, sees her decision as treasonous, Antigone's actions are justified when she honors her brother in ways only known. First, it is important to note why King Creon feels guilty about Antigone's actions. Creon makes it clear that the body of Polyneices must not be buried because he is a traitor and an enemy of the state.
Antigone's death shows how forceful Creon has become. He not only calls upon the death of Antigone but her death results in two more, his wife and son. Sophocles uses these deaths to show how a desire for power pushes people away. Antigone killing herself only drains Creon's power even more. By the end of the tragedy, Creon is left without anyone.
Because of this, it shows the audience Creon's pride in his decision making. Comparing Antigone's reverential faith and Creon's pride and self-assurance, a clear contrast can be made, Antigone’s faith leads her to do things against Creon ’s rule due to her beliefs, while Creon implements and enforces these rules due to his self-assurance. In conclusion, Antigone is a major foil in the Greek tragedy of Antigone against Creon due to her unyielding religious faith, causing her to go against Creon, and Creon’s exceptional self-assurance, causing these rules to be made and punishments to be carried
In the play Antigone, by Sophocles, Creon’s deadly stubbornness and selfishness in ignoring the pleas and
She says, “For never had I, even had I been mother of children,” and, “ Cut off from marriage feast, unlasting wife’s true joy, or mother’s bliss, with infant at her breast…” (Sophocles 34). Antigone tries to provoke emotion in Creon by also saying, “ ...I last and far most miserably descend, before my term of life is full…” (Sophocles 33), to bring attention to the fact that she will die young and will be kept from everything she is looking forward to in life. She is saying that she will never marry, she will never have a child, and she will die before it is her time, because of Creon.
In this quote, she is trying to harn Creon that although he thinks very highly of himself, he will never be able to anything to disrupt the gods and their unwritten laws (being that all men deserve burial). Additionally, the word choice and tone used by the characters also differs. When Creon talks he makes it clear that he thinks of himself quite highly and is convinced that he is above everyone else because of his excessive pride and noble stature. This leads to a tone in his speech that is very obnoxious and off-putting. To the contrary, Antigone regards herself quite low and stands for